Robert Crumb, affectionately known as “R Crumb” in the realm of cartooning — because, you know, “Bob” is far too mainstream — is a veritable titan of modern cartooning… and well, let’s just say he’s a delightful oddball. Dan Nadel’s meticulously crafted biography provides the kind of details that could fill a hardcover book. Oh, wait… it does!
For eons, Crumb was primarily recognized by the uninitiated masses for his mind-boggling cover of the Big Brother and the Holding Company/Janis Joplin album Cheap Thrills, and those wonderfully disassembled, high-on-life (or something) figures featuring the catchphrase “Keep on Truckin’” splattered on dorm-room walls everywhere. You’d think he was selling mudflaps instead of comics—oh, wait again, he kind of did. But let’s not forget: Crumb was the sheer genius driving the underground comics movement in the Sixties and Seventies, birthing and adorning Zap Comix.
Imagine a mind so deeply influenced by both LSD and a critique of humanity. Welcome to Crumb’s world, populated by a pantheon of hilariously depraved yet curiously philosophical characters. Think of Mr. Natural, the Snoid, and Fritz the Cat, all thrusting us into a universe of absurdist brilliance, characterized by his iconic hatch marks — much like the lines on your face after a long night of binge-watching and deep existential questioning.
Crumb absorbed lessons from the illustrious Harvey Kurtzman of Mad Magazine fame and Carl Barks, that unsung hero of Donald Duck lore. Yet, as Nadel points out, Crumb himself became the educational cornerstone of future cartoonists. No Crumb, as Nadel quips, means no Art Spiegelman, no Chris Ware, and certainly no Daniel Clowes. According to Spiegelman, “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb,” like a rite of passage. It’s almost like evolution, only nerdy and covered in ink.
While Crumb’s work echoed the rebellious beats of the Sixties counterculture, he was never just a standard bear. Instead, he preferred to lift the dusty records of the past—yes, the ones from the 78rpm era—much like a hipster hunting for rare vinyl. His political stance proudly parades as broadly anticorporate, but in truth, it’s his own bubbling self-examination that often steals the show. Who needs a mirror when you’ve got a pen and a rabid imagination?
Born in the glorious year of 1943 in Philadelphia, Crumb emerged from a family so dysfunctional it would put a reality TV show to shame. With a mother and father whose marriage was operatic and riddled with everything from addiction to the unusual family dynamics (we’ll leave the “I” word out of this), it’s almost a miracle he didn’t grow up to be a mere accountant. His beloved older brother tragically succumbed to the grim side of this legacy in 1992—a rather dark twist, indeed. Yet somehow, Robert was able to transform all that neurosis into a flourishing career in cartooning—ain’t art grand?
Of course, one must acknowledge that Crumb’s legacy is nothing if not #problematic. Take his character Angelfood McSpade, a hyper-eroticized caricature that would make even the most tolerant of modern critics raise an eyebrow. Rape and racial stereotypes make frequent and uncomfortable appearances in his earlier comics. The defense he and Nadel offer? Pure honesty: he doesn’t create the stereotypes; he reflects society’s colorful mess. Perplexing, isn’t it? This might be the most vivid case of “truth is stranger than fiction” one could conjure.
Join the circus that is Crumb’s sexual obsessions, where leg fetishes reign supreme. With a love for women boasting remarkable legs—because who doesn’t appreciate a good thigh?—this wasn’t just any midlife crisis; it’s a hilariously self-inflicted one. And instead of bottoming out with a midlife crisis cliche, he simply leapt from one romantic escapade to another, showcasing a peculiar charm that delighted many a female partner and befuddled just as many. Who needs societal boundaries when you’ve got outrageous charm and a penchant for the absurd?
